Showing posts with label Catherine Hellmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catherine Hellmann. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2025

Review: Guys and Dolls at Music Theater Works Now Playing Through March 30 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar

Music Theater Works 

Guys and Dolls

MUSIC THEATER WORKS’ GUYS AND DOLLS,
NOW PLAYING THROUGH MARCH 30, AT THE NORTH SHORE
CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS IN SKOKIE

Music Theater Works’ 45th Season Begins with the Frank Loesser Classic, directed
by Sasha Gerritson, choreographed by Clayton Cross and
music directed by Linda Madonia

at NorthShore Center for The Performing Arts in Skokie 

Run Time (currently): Two hours and 30 minutes including the intermission.


(L to R) Alex Villaseñor, Jenny Couch, Catherine Rodriguez O’Connor, Brandon Acosta and Emma Jean Eastland 

Guest Review

By Catherine Hellmann

A musical must be amusing if a two-and-a-half hour show retained our attention and kept us laughing throughout. What’s more fun to start things off than dancing gamblers in suits and slick fedoras during the overture? This energetic opening number made it obvious that we were in for a treat. 

(center) Cary Lovett and the cast of GUYS AND DOLLS, from Music Theater Works, now playing through March 30 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie. 

All Photos by Brett Beiner

Premiering in 1950, Guys and Dolls boasts a familiar score including “A Bushel and a Peck,” “Luck Be a Lady,” “Sue Me,” and “Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ the Boat. ” Director Sasha Gerriton writes in her notes that she “fell in love with the show’s rich, lush score and the vibrant dances” when she was 14 years old as a high school student and saw a production in downtown Chicago. In addition to the Tony-winning score by Frank Loesser, the show has a hilarious script with great characters penned by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows. 

The entire cast does an admirable job with the singing, acting, and entertaining choreography. Standouts are Callan Roberts as a very funny Nathan Detroit, Kristin Brintnall is delightful as the patiently-forever-waiting-to marry-Nathan Miss Adelaide, and Jeffrey Charles is charming as reformed sinner Sky Masterson. 

 (L to R) Callan Roberts and Cecilia Iole

“Sue Me/I Could Die” duet between Brintnall and Roberts brought applause in the middle of the song for their wonderful repartee. Cecilia Iole as Sarah Brown, the determined missionary, and Brintnall had a fantastic duet as the frustrated but resolute girlfriends in “Marry the Man Today.” Also of note are Cary Lovett as Nicely-Nicely and David Geinosky as Benny Southstreet, Nathan’s goofy henchmen. I really enjoyed Ian Reed’s Irish-cop accent as Lt. Brannigan. Andrew Freeland adds a *huge* presence as Big Jule, the intimidating gangster from East Cicero outside of Chicago who carries his own questionable dice to New York for the game of “Crap.” We were thrilled to recognize Peter Ruger from one of our favorite theater companies, Hell in a Handbag, where he was Rudolph in their recent Christmas production.  

(L to R) Adam Raso, Callan Reed, Andrew Freeland, David Geinosky and Peter Ruger 


(L to R) Adam Raso, Andrew Freeland, Alex Villaseñor and Brandon Acosta 

Clayton Cross’ choreography is very inventive and creative and adds so much lightheartedness to the show. Our first impression of the set was seeing the orchestra above the stage in a big-band style. We complimented scenic designer Ben Lipinski at intermission, and he said placing the orchestra in full view was one of his first decisions. Kudos to Pianist and Conductor Kevin Disch for his musical direction. It’s cool to be able to watch the instrumentalists in action; so often they are relegated to being behind-the-scenes. Special shout-out to costume designer Bob Kuhn for his inspired ensembles. The dancers’ garden dresses and vegetable-themed hats at the Hot Box Club were amazing! “She has carrots on her head!” I whispered to my sister. :-)    

(L to R) Catherine Rodriguez O’Connor, Jenny Couch,  Emma Jean Eastland and Emily Holland 

So, head to the suburbs where there is FREE parking and a lovely evening of musical theater awaits. As Benny declares: “I’ve always been a bad guy, and a bad gambler. From now on, I would like to be a good guy, and a good gambler.” Take a gamble and head to Skokie for this enjoyable show. Odds are, you will love it. 

Catherine Hellmann is a teacher in Chicago and a theater lover everywhere. An upcoming trip to Hawaii for spring break means she has achieved a long-time goal of visiting all 50 states.



Members of the cast of GUYS AND DOLLS, from Music Theater Works, now playing through March 30 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie. 
 
Music Theater Works is proud to kick off its 2025 season with Guys and Dolls, in the North Theatre at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie, 9501 Skokie Blvd, Skokie, March 6 - 30, 2025. Guys and Dolls, music and lyrics by Frank Loesser and book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows, is directed by Sasha Gerritson, choreographed by Clayton Cross and music directed by Linda Madonia. 

 
(center) Alex Villaseñor and members of the cast of GUYS AND DOLLS, from Music Theater Works

The performance schedule is Wednesdays at 2 p.m., Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 7:30
p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m., with additional performances on Saturdays, March 15, March 22
and March 29 at 2 p.m. Tickets are now on sale from $19.50 to $89 with tickets for guests
25 years old and younger available at half-price at MusicTheaterWorks.com or by calling
the Music Theater Works box office at the North Shore Center, 847.673.6300. Group
discounts are also available for groups of 10 or more by contacting 847.920.5360.
Music Theater Works’ season kicks off with what many believe is the “perfect musical” with
every song in its score a part of the American musical classic. Guys and Dolls whisks
audiences from Manhattan to Havana and back again with career gambler Sky Masterson,
“Save-A-Soul” missionary Sarah Brown, Miss Adelaide, Nathan Detroit and others in this
exuberant, big, brassy musical. Join Music Theater Works at the Hot Box Club onstage for
an unforgettable time.

The cast of Guys and Dolls includes, in alphabetical order: Brandon Acosta (he/him,
Liver Lips/Ensemble/US Nathan Detroit/fight and intimacy captain); Jordan Beyeler
(she/her, swing); Kristin Brintnall (she/her, Miss Adelaide); Caron Buinis (she/her,
General Cartwright); Jeffrey Charles (he/him, Sky Masterson); Jenny Couch (she/her,
ensemble); Emma Jean Eastlund (she/her, ensemble); Andrew Freeland (he/him, Big
Jule/ensemble); David Geinosky (he/him, Benny Southstreet/ensemble/US Nicely
Nicely); Joe Giovannetti (he/him, ensemble/US Sky Masterson); Isabella
Gomez-Barrientos (she/her, Agatha/ensemble/US Sarah Brown); Ben Harmon (he/they,
Angie The Ox/ensemble); Emily Holland (she/her, ensemble/US Miss Adelaide); Cecilia
Iole (she/her, Sarah Brown); Dee Kimpel (she/her, Martha/ensemble/US General
Cartwright); Kyle Kite (he/him, ensemble); Miguel Long (he/him, Rusty
Charlie/ensemble); Cary Lovett (he/him, Nicely Nicely Johnson/US Arvide Abernathy);
Matthew Millin (he/him, swing); Catherine Rodriguez O’Connor (she/her, ensemble);
Adam Raso (he/him, Harry the Horse/ensemble/US Lt. Brannigan); Ian Reed (he/him, Lt.
Brannigan); Callan Roberts (he/him, Nathan Detroit); Peter Ruger (he/him,
Calvin/ensemble/US Big Jule); Bob Sanders (he/him, Arvide Abernathy) and Alex
Villaseñor (he/him, ensemble/Non-Equity Deputy).


(L to R) Cecilia Iole and Jeffrey Charles

The Guys and Dolls orchestra includes Kevin Disch (piano/conductor); Alison Tatum
(she/her, violin); Cara Strauss (she/her, reed 1); Eva Lewis Butcher (she/her, reed 2);
Amy Nelson (she/her, trumpet); Stephanie Lebens (she/her, trombone); Eric Von Holst
(he/him, bass) and Lindsay Williams (she/her, drums).

Guys and Dolls’ creative team is Sasha Gerritson (she/her, director); Clayton Cross
(he/him, choreographer); Linda Madonia (she/her, music director); Amber Wutke
(she/her, intimacy and violence choreographer); Kathy Logelin (she/her, dialect coach);
Rachel Rock (she/her, stage manager); Ethan Colish (he/him, assistant stage manager);
Ben Lipinski (any with respect, scenic designer); Nga Sze Chan (she/her, properties
designer), Bob Kuhn (he/him, costume designer); Kristen Brinati (she/her, wardrobe
head); Alice Salazar (she/her, hair/wig/makeup co-designer); Melanie Saso (she/her,
hair/wig/makeup co-designer); Andrew Meyers (he/him, lighting designer); Forrest
Gregor (he/him, sound designer); Kimberly Carbone (she/her, production sound
engineer) and Andersonville Scenic Studios (scene shop).


(L to R) Bob Sanders and Cecilia Iole



(L to R) Bob Sanders, Isabella Gomez-Barrientos, Cecilia Iole, Dee Kimpel and Peter Ruger 


Binny’s Broadway Lounge
Music Theater Works’ donors of any level and subscribers are welcome to access Binny’s
Broadway Lounge before the performance and at intermission of Guys and Dolls. Binny’s
Broadway Lounge, sponsored by Binny’s Beverage Depot, is located on the second floor
at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie offering complimentary drinks
and snacks and does not require reservations. The Lounge is available during Guys and
Dolls, Saturday, March 8 (opens at 6:30 p.m.) and Saturday, March 15 (opens at 1 p.m.).

ASL Interpreted Performance
The Saturday, March 22 at 7:30 p.m. performance will be ASL interpreted by Michael
Albert and Laurie Waldeck.








ABOUT SASHA GERRITSON, DIRECTOR
Sasha Gerritson is an opera and musical theater stage director who directs shows for many local and regional companies. Most recently having directed the critically acclaimed Music Theater Works’ production of Carousel, in addition to previous Music Theater Works’ shows Brigadoon and Irving Berlin's White Christmas, she is proud to return for Guys & Dolls. Known for her expertise in the standard repertoire, Gerritson is also a highly sought after opera director, having most recently directed Puccini's Manon Lescaut and Il Assassinio Nella Cattedrale for The Opera Festival of Chicago, where she serves as general director. In addition to her work as a stage director, Gerritson is a choral conductor and serves as the director of Music Ministries for the Park Ridge Community Church.

Previous work as a choral conductor included positions with the Chicago Children's Choir
and Merit School of Music. Gerritson is a proud board member of Music Theater Works, in
addition to The Goodman Theatre, the Brookfield Zoo and DePaul University, where she
serves as vice chair of the Board of Trustees. She served as the opera and music theatre
director of Northeastern Illinois University from 2010-2022, has directed for Musica Nelle
Marche (Urbino, Italy), Opera Piccola, DePaul University, the Cherub Music Theatre
program for Northwestern University, in addition to various other summer programs in the
area. She lives in Glenview with her husband Eugene Jarvis and their two sons, Nate and
Josh.


(L to R) Jenny Couch, Catherine Rodriguez O’Connor, Kristin Brintnall, Emily Holland and Emma Jean Eastland 

ABOUT CLAYTON CROSS, CHOREOGRAPHER
Clayton Cross works nationwide as a choreographer, performer and dance
instructor. Cross was most recently in the ensemble and dance captain of Rock Of Ages
with Mercury Theater Chicago, with Drury Lane in the ensemble and dance captain in
Grease as well as in the ensemble in Evita. He most recently choreographed Brigadoon
for Music Theatre Works. He was last seen on the Music Theater Works stage as “Scuttle”
in Disney’s The Little Mermaid, in the ensemble of Mamma Mia!, as choreographer for
Irving Berlin’s White Christmas and Billy Elliot The Musical. He was choreographer in
residence with Music Theater Works under the direction of Rudy Hogenmiller for seven
seasons where he choreographed and/or performed in Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Dreamcoat as “Benjamin”, Hunchback of Notre Dame, How to Succeed in
Business Without Really Trying, Into The Woods, Anything Goes as “ensemble”, Pirates of
Penzance as “ensemble”, Peter Pan as “Nana/Croc”, Gypsy as “Tulsa”, Mame as “ensemble”, Candide, Guys and Dolls, My Fair Lady, Die Fladermanus, The Fantasticks as “Mute,” Damn Yankees as “Eddie” and in A Chorus Line as “Greg” with Porchlight MusicTheatre. Cross also performed at Marriott Theatre in La Cage Aux Follies as “Mercedes”.

He is an instructor and choreographer for M.A. Dance Nation, a Texas based traveling
convention circuit, where he has been choreographing, teaching and judging since
1999. Cross has five times been a consultant and contributed choreography for the Capital
One Bowl’s “All American Halftime Show.” Throughout his 25 year career as a dancer he
has worked with Robert Battle, Fernando Bujones, Sherry Zunker, Paul Taylor and Anne
Reinking. Cross’s television credits include “Every Dancer Has a Story,
” a PBS special on the River North Chicago Dance Company, where he was a company member for 10
seasons and toured nationally and internationally. He is originally from Midland, Texas
where he received his early training from La Petite Dance Co., Coleman Academy and the
Midland Community Theatre as a member of the Pickwick Players. He holds a double
B.F.A. in Ballet and Modern Dance from Texas Christian University.


(L to R) Kristin Brintnall and Cecilia Iole

ABOUT LINDA MADONIA, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Linda Madonia is thrilled to be back at Music Theater Works where she has previously
music directed Legally Blonde:The Musical, Shrek: The Musical, Mamma Mia! and
Camelot. Other recent projects include; Jersey Boys, Rock of Ages and Sister Act at
Mercury Theater Chicago. Anything Goes, Cabaret and A Chorus Line at Porchlight Music
Theatre. Madonia also serves as the contractor for the Chicago Federation of Musicians
for Porchlight Music Theatre, Music Theater Works and Teatro Zinzanni. She is the vocal
coach for the Master’s Degree program in Music Theatre Pedagogy at Carthage College
and owns American Eagle Productions, which has been at the forefront of Theatre
Education in the Chicago area for the past 35 years.


(L to R) David Geinosky, Cary Lovett and Miguel Long 
 in GUYS AND DOLLS, from Music Theater Works, now playing through March 30 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie. 

Music Theater Works 2025 Season
The 45th season includes Guys and Dolls, March 6 - 30; Fiddler on the Roof, August 7 -
17; Godspell, October 23 - November 16 and Annie, December 18, 2025 - January 4,
2026. For more information on the 45th season go to MusicTheaterWorks.com.


ABOUT MUSIC THEATER WORKS
Music Theater Works is a resident professional not-for-profit music theater founded in 1980. During its 45-year history it has presented more than 150 productions and intimate presentations. Music Theater Works is a professional theater company whose mission is to present works for the musical stage including historic repertoire, revitalizing the Golden
Age of Broadway and earlier works, celebrating the Great American Songbook and introducing modern classics.




Show dates and times:
Saturday, March 8 at 7:30 p.m. – Binny’s Broadway Lounge (opens at 6:30 p.m. )
Sunday, March 9 at 2 p.m.

Wednesday, March 12 at 2 p.m.
Friday, March 14 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 15 at 2 p.m. – Binny’s Broadway Lounge (opens at 1 p.m.)
Saturday, March 15 at 7:30 p.m. 
Sunday, March 16 at 2 p.m.

Wednesday, March 19 at 2 p.m.
Friday, March 21 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 22 at 2 p.m.
Saturday, March 22 at 7:30 p.m. – ASL Interpreted
Sunday, March 23 at 2 p.m.

Wednesday, March 26 at 2 p.m.
Friday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 29 at 2 p.m.
Saturday, March 29 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 30 at 2 p.m.

Tickets: $19.50 to $89, tickets for guests 25 years old and younger are available for half- price.

Music Theater Works Box Office: (847) 673-6300





Monday, February 20, 2023

REVIEW: Chicago Tap Theatre at 20: “Tempo, Rhythm, & Time” At The Den Theatre February 18 and 19, 2023

Chicago Tap Theatre Celebrates Two Decades of Performances Revisiting Classic Pieces that Shaped the Company 
Plus Two World Premieres


Chicago Tap Theatre Company Members
Photo by David Harmantas

REVIEW

By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 


“JOY” is the word I keep circling back to in describing the 20th anniversary show and gala presentation by Chicago Tap Theatre. “Exhuberant!” is the other. 


Such a fun experience marveling at the passion and talent these folks brought to every single number. I barely took any notes because my attention was riveted to the fast-moving feet and thrilled smiles of the dancers. 


I really loved the “Under Pressure” number starring Christopher Matthews, Heather Latakas, Molly Eder, and Sara Anderson. Molly Smith and Sterling Harris each had solo numbers that were extraordinary. Artistic Director and Founder Mark Yonally also made a few appearances to share his love of the company he created. 


Act I ended with a rousing rendition of “Birdland.” A dozen tap dancers in close proximity is LOUD but glorious. (I was reminded of taking my ex to a ballet production years ago at the Auditorium Theater, and he referred to the troop of ballerinas jumping around as “a herd of swans.” He was a jerk, but he could be funny…)  Everyone was having a blast. 


Act II included a number by several women from Hope College in Holland, Michigan. Spreading the excitement West of the Lake. 


The final number was “Somebody to Love” by Queen with choreography by Mark Yonally, providing every dancer their moment to shine. The costumes were bright, vivid colors. There was singing by the Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus. The musicians also deserve special note (nice pun, eh?): fabulous bass player and music director Kurt Schweitz assembled a wonderful band with Chris Greene on sax. So much power and energy filled The Den Theater. 


My elation got the better of me, and I registered for the silent auction being held after the performance. From the passenger seat of my sister’s car, I purchased a bakery gift certificate and, even more amusing, a wine tasting for “up to twenty people.” Oops. Now I need to locate 20 of my best friends to go with me. LMK if you’re interested. ;-) Cheers!  


Cath Hellmann loves discovering gems in her fair city like Chicago Tap Theatre and, apparently, a new bakery and winery. Salut! 


 

Chicago Tap Theatre - Liora Lahav

Photo by David Harmantas


Chicago Tap Theatre celebrates 20 years of critically acclaimed dance with a show that is sure to impress. As always, the dancers of CTT will be joined by some of the finest musicians in Chicago playing everything from David Bowie to Queen to Charlie Parker.


All of the funds raised from this event will help CTT continue to represent tap dance and Chicago at the highest level, while providing access to world-class tap education and shows, and ensuring the viability of tap dance as an occupation by providing training and performance opportunities for their community.


Click here for more information: ChicagoTapTheatre.com.



CHICAGO TAP THEATRE LAUNCHES ITS 20TH ANNIVERSARY WITH 

“CHICAGO TAP THEATRE AT 20: TEMPO, RHYTHM AND TIME,” 


Artistic Director Mark Yonally and Chicago Tap Theatre (CTT) present “Chicago Tap Theatre at 20: Tempo, Rhythm and Time” at The Den Theatre, 1333 N. Milwaukee Ave., February 18 and 19, 2023. The weekend celebrates CTT’s two decades as one of Chicago’s premier dance companies as well as showcasing their talent worldwide. 


Chicago Tap Theatre launches its 20th anniversary with a celebratory performance featuring classics from its 20-year history, including two world premieres as well as pieces that have not been seen in Chicago since their debut. Chicago Tap Theatre is proud to revisit pieces from some of the early choreographers that shaped the Company including Mark Yonally, Rich Ashworth, Kirsten Uttich and new works from Heather Cornell, Tré Dumas, Sterling Harris, Molly Smith and Mark Yonally.

 

Past dances include Molly Smith's groundbreaking "Protect Trans Kids" and Mark Yonally’s “Somebody to Love,” which originally premiered in Chicago Tap Theatre’s 2016 Pride Show. As in the original production, the Chicago Gay Men's Chorus will join Chicago Tap Theatre for “Somebody to Love.”

 

There will also be two new commissions seeing the stage at this performance. Concert tap dance pioneer Heather Cornell, founding artistic director of Manhattan Tap, has set her masterpiece “Scrapple from the Apple” for CTT and local tap dancer, Tré Dumas, is creating a world premiere for this production.


Chicago Tap Theatre at 20: Tempo, Rhythm and Time features choreography by Heather Cornell, Tré Dumas, Sterling Harris, Molly Smith and Mark Yonally. Kurt Schweitz returns as the production’s Music Director and dancers for “Chicago Tap Theatre at 20: Tempo, Rhythm and Time” include Mark Yonally, Molly Smith, Sterling Harris, Sara Anderson, Heather Latakas, Molly Eder, Chris Matthews, Amber Buchanan, Liora Lahav, Michelle Haskell, Abby Cooper, Kirsten Uttich, Isaac Stauffer, Jorie Goins and Earlyn Whitehead. 


ABOUT CHICAGO TAP THEATRE

Founded in 2002, Chicago Tap Theatre is a growing and vibrant dance company dedicated to preserving the quintessentially American dance form of tap while taking it to the next level of creativity, innovation and quality. CTT performs exclusively with live music provided by some of Chicago’s finest musicians playing everything from Duke Ellington to David Bowie and many artists in between. Under the dynamic direction of master teacher and performer Mark Yonally, CTT has gained a loyal and sizable following in Chicago and continues to tour both nationally and internationally. Having pioneered the “tap opera” format, which tells stories with compelling characters and intriguing plots, CTT has used the language of tap dance, live music and narration to move audiences for over 20 years.


Saturday, February 18, 2023

REVIEW: YURI POSSOKHOV’S ANNA KARENINA Via The Joffrey Ballet February 15-26, 2023

ChiIL Live Shows On Our Radar
THE JOFFREY BALLET REMOUNTS YURI POSSOKHOV’S BLOCKBUSTER 
ANNA KARENINA


World premiere in 2019 praised for its original score and breathtaking, cinematic production by all-star creative team

REVIEW:

By Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 


Posted on the Joffrey’s Website:

“Potential Protest Demonstration 

The Joffrey supports the right to freedom of expression.

Please be aware that there is a possibility of demonstrators protesting the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the vicinity of the Lyric Opera House.”

Indeed, audience members approaching the Lyric Opera on Wednesday night February 15 were greeted by peaceful protestors bearing signs, the now-familiar yellow and blue flags of Ukraine, and even a couple effigies criticizing Russia. The Joffrey Ballet’s decision to stage Anna Karenina by Russian author Leo Tolstoy was viewed as a celebration of Russian culture while Ukraine is being decimated by the Russian invasion. 

The Joffrey Ballet is to be commended for how they handled the possibly inflammatory situation. An announcement was made before the show expressing support for the country of Ukraine. Lights projected on the Lyric stage were yellow and blue. The Lyric Opera Orchestra played a beautiful symphonic piece by a Ukrainian composer to honor the Ukrainian people. 

Despite politics, art endures. 


Victoria Jaiani Alberto Velazquez Anais Bueno ensemble 
Anna Karenina 
All Production Photos by Cheryl Mann 

The ballet, choreographed by Yuri Possokhov, was stunning. The costumes by Tom Pye were beautiful. The projections by Finn Ross also added a lot of context to the production. The results are magical. 

Edson Barbosa

The tragic story of Anna and her lover, Count Vronsky, cannot end happily. Young Princess Kitty loves Vronsky, but he is obviously smitten by Anna. Family friend Constantine Levin does love Kitty, but she wants the emotionally unavailable Vronsky. (At this point, I am reminded of a love triangle that currently exists among the high school teenagers I teach, and my head hurts…)  Anna is already married to Alexey Karenin with whom she shares a son. She and Vronsky run away to Italy where Anna gets very ill.  Her husband is not allowing her to see their son anymore. Kitty accepts Levin’s latest proposal, so there is that. Anna throws herself (spoiler of a novel written in 1878!) in front of a train. What a drama queen…



Christine Rocas and Dylan Gutierrez

My favorite quote of the evening was my friend’s mother-in-law who observed, on all the movement happening in the bed at one point,”Oh, I know what was going on there.”   ;-)

The leads were spectacular. Anna Karenina was beautifully played by Victoria Jaiani. The rejected-but-gorgeous Alexey Karenin was danced by Dylan Gutierrez. Adorable and hot Alberto Velazquez was Alexey Vronsky.  Anais Bueno was a lovely Kitty.  Konstatin Levin was danced by Yoshihisa Arai, who was also the Nutcracker Prince we saw in December. I just love the diverse roster of dancers assembled by Joffrey from all over the world. It makes me so happy to see this talented assembly of artists. 

Christine Rocas and Ensemble

Politics may divide us, unfortunately. 

But art and beauty bring us together.

Catherine Hellmann is a teacher, mom, and art lover. She visited Russia in 2003 through an educator program and loved the people and culture in Vyborg, Moscow, and St. Petersburg. Russia has a very special place in her heart. The current events in Ukraine are infuriating and sorrowful.  



This winter, The Joffrey Ballet remounts Yuri Possokhov’s blockbuster Anna Karenina for the first time since its crowd-pleasing world premiere in 2019. Based on the novel by Leo Tolstoy, Possokhov’s immersive adaptation—winner of the 2019 “Oscars of Dance” Benois de la Danse International Prize for Best Choreography—features an original composition by award-winning composer Ilya Demutsky, costumes and sets by Emmy Award-winning designer Tom Pye, and lighting by famed designer David Finn. Anna Karenina will be presented at the historic Lyric Opera House, 20 North Upper Wacker Drive in downtown Chicago, in ten performances only, from February 15-26, 2023.


Alberto Velazquez and ensemble

Love is all-consuming for the beautiful but married Anna, who in the pursuit of passion, finds herself caught in a life-changing affair with the dashing Count Vronsky. Set in the late 19th century, Tolstoy’s classic shows the triumph of romance, family, and faith against a backdrop of fraught political and social transformation. 


Alberto Velazquez and ensemble



Victoria Jaiani Alberto Velazquez 

With countless adaptations across ballet, theatre, opera, and film, Anna Karenina is often considered the earliest example of modernist literature and one of the greatest works of literature in history. Possokhov’s immersive adaptation updates the timeless story for contemporary audiences with its captivating choreography, stunning costume design, and cinematic storytelling that unravels the profound power, passion, and desire that shapes the 19th century novel.

The Mary B. Galvin Artistic Director of The Joffrey Ballet Ashley Wheater MBE says, “Anna Karenina is a powerful universal love story animated by the highs and lows of human emotion. I am especially grateful to partner again with esteemed choreographer Yuri Possokhov to remount a multi-dimensional production that touched audiences across Chicago and beyond with its immersive artistry.” 


Christine Rocas and Dylan Gutierrez

The Joffrey Ballet President and CEO Greg Cameron adds, "The 2022-23 season represents the breadth of Joffrey's artistry, from the original work presented by Chanel DaSilva in Beyond Borders, to the modern masterpiece that is Christopher Wheeldon's The Nutcracker, to the remount of Yuri Possokhov's blockbuster Anna Karenina--an all-time classic set to an original score. Following a record-breaking return to pre-pandemic attendance with The Nutcracker, we look forward to welcoming audiences back to the iconic Lyric Opera House this winter. Not only will guests experience Anna Karenina's story that has transcended the ages; they will witness the transformative power and innovation on which the Joffrey was founded."

Known for his visceral and expressive style, Possokhov has created groundbreaking new works around the globe. A frequent guest artist with The Joffrey Ballet, Possokhov is internationally recognized for transforming iconic literature into inventive, emotionally driven story ballets. Possokhov choreographed the world premiere adaptation of Anna Karenina for The Joffrey Ballet in 2019 to critical acclaim. In addition to Anna Karenina, Possokhov’s collaborations with The Joffrey Ballet include Bells (2014), The Miraculous Mandarin (2017), and Don Quixote (2011, 2022).


Victoria Jaiani and Alberto Velazquez


Anna Karenina features live music performed by the Lyric Opera Orchestra, conducted by Scott Speck, Music Director of The Joffrey Ballet. 

Special thanks to Presenting and Commissioning Sponsor Mr. and Mrs. Joel V. Williamson, Major and Commissioning Sponsor Mary Jo and Doug Basler, and Major Sponsor The Women’s Board of The Joffrey Ballet.


Victoria Jaiani 

Ticket information
The Joffrey Ballet performs Anna Karenina from Wednesday, February 15 to Sunday, February 26, 2023, at the Lyric Opera House, 20 N. Upper Wacker Drive. The full schedule is as follows: Wednesday, February 15 at 7:30PM; Friday, February 17 at 7:30PM; Saturday, February 18 at 2:00PM and 7:30 PM; Sunday, February 19 at 2:00 PM; Thursday, February 23 at 7:30PM; Friday, February 24 at 7:30PM; Saturday, February 25 at 2:00PM and 7:30PM; and Sunday, February 26 at 2:00PM.

Single tickets start at $36 and are available for purchase at Lyric Opera Box Office located at 20 N. Upper Wacker Dr. by telephone at 312.386.8905, or online at  joffrey.org.


Victoria Jaiani and Alberto Velazquez


Anna Karenina Tour
Yuri Possokhov’s Anna Karenina travels to the Kennedy Center Opera House in Washington, D.C. from April 5 to April 9, 2023. For the full schedule, visit kennedy-center.org


Edson Barbosa and Ensemble

About The Joffrey Ballet
The Joffrey Ballet is one of the premier dance companies in the world today, with a reputation for boundary-breaking performances for more than 60 years. The Joffrey repertoire is an extensive collection of all-time classics, modern masterpieces, and original works. 

Founded in 1956 by pioneers Robert Joffrey and Gerald Arpino, the Joffrey remains dedicated to artistic expression, innovation, and first-rate education and engagement programming. The Joffrey Ballet continues to thrive under The Mary B. Galvin Artistic Director Ashley Wheater MBE and President and CEO Greg Cameron.

The Joffrey Ballet is grateful for the support of its 2022–2023 Season Sponsors: Abbott Fund, Alphawood Foundation Chicago, Daniel and Pamella DeVos Foundation, The Florian Fund, Anne L. Kaplan, Nancy and Sanfred Koltun, and Live Music Sponsors Sandy and Roger Deromedi, Sage Foundation, and The Marina and Arnold Tatar Fund for Live Music. The Joffrey also acknowledges Season Partners Chicago Athletic Clubs, and Athletico Physical Therapy, official provider of physical therapy for The Joffrey Ballet.

With gratitude to Anna Karenina Commissioning Sponsors: Producing Sponsors Margot and Josef Lakonishok and NIB Foundation; Major Sponsors Lorna Ferguson and Terry Clark, Nancy and Sanfred Koltun, Mr. and Mrs. Joel V. Williamson, The Walter E. Heller Foundation, JHL Capital Group, Jane Ellen Murray Foundation, Diane and John Patience, Poetry Foundation, Rudolf Nureyev Fund at The Joffrey Ballet; and Sponsors Mary Jo and Doug Basler, Ethel and William Gofen, Bill and Orli Staley Foundation, and the Australian Consulate-General in Chicago.

For more information on The Joffrey Ballet and its programs, visit joffrey.org. Connect with the Joffrey on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn.



Nicole Ciapponi and ensemble

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

REVIEW: Basil Twist's Symphonie Fantastique Film Via The Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival


ChiIL Mama’s ChiIL Picks List

I was eager to see Basil Twist's Symphonie Fantastique Film, but woke up yesterday with a stomach bug. Fortunately I have some fabulous friends who were more than happy to review in my place. I'll be back out Puppet Festing this Thursday at The MCA, reviewing Macunaíma Gourmet by Pigmalião Escultura que Mexe (Brazil) for ChiILLiveShows.com.

Bonnie Kenaz-Mara

ChiIL Live Shows/ ChiIL Mama 


Review
by Catherine Hellmann, Guest Critic 
 
Basil Twist is a New York-based puppeteer (born in Chicago!) who has made a film involving feather and fabric puppets in a 1,000 gallon tank of water. It’s set to one of my favorite pieces of music, Hector Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique. Inspired by the serendipitous finds of locating a 100-gallon aquarium and a record of the symphony in a box on the street, one must admire his creativity. Making a movie/abstract puppet show based on found items from the sidewalk would never cross my mind. He found the title of the symphony and its length (just under an hour) to be perfect for his project. As Twist observed,”Even dropping fabric into water can be beautiful.”   
The piece has five movements with a storyline of an artist who is obsessed with a beautiful woman...that ends badly (spoiler!) with him facing the gallows. Basil Twist matched each movement with a color theme to mark the mood: the first section has many colors, followed by black and white with bits of red, section three features blues, four has oranges and greens. The final movement brings all the colors together.   

The music is a piano solo by the extremely talented Christopher O’Riley who plays the entire score (adapted by the brilliant composer Franz Liszt) from memory. 

The film shows the live action of the puppet show, the pianist, and some of the backstage movement which is like a well-planned ballet. Five puppeteers must navigate around each other in a choreographed dance. As Twist told the audience at the post-show discussion: “Puppetry is movement.” It would be fun to see this show live which includes a backstage tour of the (tsunami?) water mess. 

Upstairs on the 4th floor at the gorgeous Fine Arts Building is a puppet “pop up” of fun displays. We enjoyed getting our photo taken with a giant girl puppet in the cafe. It’s neat that Chicago hosts this worldwide event.

Catherine Hellmann teaches Psychology and Humanities at a downtown charter school where she is the ooooooldest teacher in the building. (Thank you, Abbott Elementary!) Rather than get a sensible night’s sleep, she’s usually at the theater on a school night…  


Review

by Flo Mano, Guest Critic 

I was mesmerized by the movement & colors & texture! I saw Matisse in the first transparent cutouts! Then Dolphins & eels in a sensual, flirting, playful romance! When the music got intense -the red & black feathers felt like predators-sharks. When it was dark I saw outer space-stars- nebulas & comets! The sparkling broken waves like crystal gems! Then the inward  folding of the fabric like a sea urchin-no needles. The red squiggly fiber optics looked like jellyfish & the interwound, colorful tinsel felt like seaweed! The lighting was magic throughout-eliciting emotions to the music- like a tight Tango-not missing a beat! The Q&A was enlightening. It was also fun being silly at the cafe before the show.

Flo Mano is a CPS elementary teacher-aide/librarian, hairdresser, and theater/film fanatic who catches hundreds of Chicago shows annually. She volunteers at numerous film venues and theaters.


Symphonie Fantastique Film
A film by Basil Twist (U.S./New York)
Presented by the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival
Studebaker Theater, 410 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago
Tickets: $15/$10 students and seniors
One show only: Tuesday, January 24 at 6 p.m.
Family Friendly - ALL AGES
ADA accessible
55 minutes

In 1998, puppeteer Basil Twist debuted his boundary-breaking response to Berlioz's 1830 "Symphonie Fantastique" to universal acclaim. In the two decades since, Twist became an internationally recognized artist in opera, ballet, and on Broadway, winning countless awards including the illustrious MacArthur Fellowship.

In 2018 Twist revisited his legendary masterpiece in its original home, the HERE Arts Center in NYC with live accompaniment by the virtuosic Christopher O'Riley playing the exquisite Liszt transcription for concert piano and in a significantly larger aquarium. Symphonie played a critically lauded and sold-out six-month run, allowing the finest performances to be captured on film in front of, behind, and inside the 1,000-gallon water tank by Twist and director Bobby Sheehan. 

Soon after, while on a Rome Prize fellowship, Twist collaborated with master Italian film artisans to edit and refine the definitive filmed version of this iconic theatrical experience. The result, Twist’s first full-length film, is not just a document of a performance but an artistic expression in its own right, weaving imagery seen by the audience with the unseen backstage ballet of the puppeteers and the emotional synergy of the live musical performance. It received its world premiere at the 2019 World Puppetry Festival in Charleville Mézières, France, where Twist was the guest of honor. 

While Basil Twist's Symphonie Fantastique Film was a one and done showing for Chicago, Basil Twist's “Dogugaeshi,” is still coming up 

Basil Twist, the internationally acclaimed master puppeteer and recipient of the Rome Prize, unfolds an intimate, abstract, contemporary journey of images and emotions. A feast for the eyes, heart and soul, this Chicago premiere is influenced by “Dogugaeshi,” a rarefied tradition of Japanese sliding screen stage technique, and Twist’s own encounters with the remaining rural caretakers of this once popular art form. Winner of the 2005 Bessie Award and an UNIMA Award for Excellence in Puppetry, Dogugaeshi features original shamisen compositions created and performed live by authorized master musicians Yumiko Tanaka and Yoko Reikano Kimura.

Basil Twist, a third generation puppeteer, has significantly contributed to the art of puppetry since 1998, known worldwide for creating original abstract adult puppet works focused on their integration with music. His famous work Symphonie Fantastique, which takes place in a tank of water, is performed to the symphony of the same name. (A new film version is screening Tuesday, January 24 at 6 p.m. at the Studebaker Theater as part of this year’s festival.) n 2010, Twist created the puppetry for the Broadway productions of The Pee-wee Herman Show and The Addams Family. Other works include La Bella Dormente nel BoscoPetrushkaHansel and GretelMaster Peter's Puppet Show, the Araneidae ShowBehind the Lid, and Arias with a Twist. He has received national and regional recognition through numerous awards, including a Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, an Obie Award, a Creative Capital Award in the discipline of Performing Arts and a Guggenheim fellowship. He was a Fall 2015 MacArthur Fellow at the NYU Center for Ballet and the Arts. He attended Oberlin College and graduated from the École Supérieure Nationale des Arts de la Marionnette in Charleville-Mézières, France. He is founder and director of the Dream Music Puppetry Program at Here Arts Center in NYC. His newest project is leading the puppetry in the Royal Shakespeare Company adaptation of My Neighbor Totoro at the Barbican Theatre, London. basiltwist.com

Dogugaeshi - Basil Twist
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